"J Street versus Netanyahu" Correct, but it applies to all lite Zionism.

Despite some very mild trolling by Barry - which is causing the usual whining - everybody noted that the first thing the Americans did after Bibi's victory and his series of outrageous actions and remarks insulting the United States was to back up Israeli intransigence: "Israel 'boycotts' UN rights council session on Gaza war"

Having said that, there are encouraging - and amazing - signs of a break: "AP Analysis: Is Israel democratic? Not so clear" (the traditionally ultra-Zionist AP does the math!):

"But among Israelis themselves, there is increasing angst over the
fact that their country of 8 million people also controls some 2.5
million West Bank Palestinians who have no voting rights for its
parliament.
If the 2 million Palestinians of Gaza — a territory
dominated indirectly by Israel — were added to the equation, then
together with the 2 million Arab citizens of "Israel proper" the Holy
Land would be home to a population of some 12 million, equally divided
between Arabs and Jews.
Of the Arabs, only a third have voting
rights. These are the "Israeli Arabs" who live in the areas that became
Israel in the 1948-49 war, which established the country's borders.
Israel
occupied the West Bank and Gaza in 1967 but Israel never annexed them,
both for fear of world reaction and due to concerns about millions more
Palestinians gaining the vote.
Israelis argue that since the areas
are not formally part of Israel, the goings-on therein do not undermine
the democracy claim. And some might note that few democracies are
perfect; after all, some 4 million U.S. citizens in Puerto Rico cannot
vote for the U.S. president because of that island's unusual
arrangement. In the end, perhaps, these things are a matter of degree.
But
critics increasingly consider it a little too convenient: Israel builds
towns by the score in these non-annexed lands — communities which have
bestowed an oddly controversial aspect upon the once-innocent term
"settlements."
Through an amendment to the electoral law, Israel
allows the settlers who live in these places to vote in its elections
even though it otherwise has no provision for absentee balloting.
Several top Cabinet figures, including Foreign Minister Avigdor
Lieberman, are in this extraordinary fashion not technically residents
of Israel."

"Kolomoisky, Dismissed As Governor Of Dniepropetrovsk, Issues New Threat For This Press Question — Has He Lost His Swiss Residence Permit?" Never fear, he still has the traditional out for scoundrals of his ilk:

"Kolomoisky is the target of a Russian prosecutor’s warrant for
conspiracy to murder; commission of war crimes; and kidnapping. Interpol
is unlikely to have accepted the Russian request for his arrest and
extradition, but if Kolomoisky were to leave Ukraine, the only country
certain to allow him entry would be Israel, where he and his family have
lived in the past."

Round up the cancer: "What happened when Patrick Moore was challenged to drink a glass of glyphosate?"

"J Street versus Netanyahu" Correct, but it applies to all lite Zionism.

Despite some very mild trolling by Barry - which is causing the usual whining - everybody noted that the first thing the Americans did after Bibi's victory and his series of outrageous actions and remarks insulting the United States was to back up Israeli intransigence: "Israel 'boycotts' UN rights council session on Gaza war"

Having said that, there are encouraging - and amazing - signs of a break: "AP Analysis: Is Israel democratic? Not so clear" (the traditionally ultra-Zionist AP does the math!):

"But among Israelis themselves, there is increasing angst over the
fact that their country of 8 million people also controls some 2.5
million West Bank Palestinians who have no voting rights for its
parliament.
If the 2 million Palestinians of Gaza — a territory
dominated indirectly by Israel — were added to the equation, then
together with the 2 million Arab citizens of "Israel proper" the Holy
Land would be home to a population of some 12 million, equally divided
between Arabs and Jews.
Of the Arabs, only a third have voting
rights. These are the "Israeli Arabs" who live in the areas that became
Israel in the 1948-49 war, which established the country's borders.
Israel
occupied the West Bank and Gaza in 1967 but Israel never annexed them,
both for fear of world reaction and due to concerns about millions more
Palestinians gaining the vote.
Israelis argue that since the areas
are not formally part of Israel, the goings-on therein do not undermine
the democracy claim. And some might note that few democracies are
perfect; after all, some 4 million U.S. citizens in Puerto Rico cannot
vote for the U.S. president because of that island's unusual
arrangement. In the end, perhaps, these things are a matter of degree.
But
critics increasingly consider it a little too convenient: Israel builds
towns by the score in these non-annexed lands — communities which have
bestowed an oddly controversial aspect upon the once-innocent term
"settlements."
Through an amendment to the electoral law, Israel
allows the settlers who live in these places to vote in its elections
even though it otherwise has no provision for absentee balloting.
Several top Cabinet figures, including Foreign Minister Avigdor
Lieberman, are in this extraordinary fashion not technically residents
of Israel."

"Kolomoisky, Dismissed As Governor Of Dniepropetrovsk, Issues New Threat For This Press Question — Has He Lost His Swiss Residence Permit?" Never fear, he still has the traditional out for scoundrals of his ilk:

"Kolomoisky is the target of a Russian prosecutor’s warrant for
conspiracy to murder; commission of war crimes; and kidnapping. Interpol
is unlikely to have accepted the Russian request for his arrest and
extradition, but if Kolomoisky were to leave Ukraine, the only country
certain to allow him entry would be Israel, where he and his family have
lived in the past."

Round up the cancer: "What happened when Patrick Moore was challenged to drink a glass of glyphosate?"